View Full Version : Irish Going?
Onlyforfun
28th April 2005, 09:40
What is Yielding equivalent to?
mathare
28th April 2005, 09:47
I think it is wetter than soft but not as sticky as heavy.
I have seen goings of Good (Good to Yielding in places) and Soft to Yielding (Soft to Heavy in places) on Irish racing websites I have just been browsing. That's what made me draw the conclusion I have
Onlyforfun
28th April 2005, 09:59
Cheers Mat, sooner we have a nice 10point scale the better! :)
mathare
28th April 2005, 10:04
That can be judged using a stick in the ground or something - I agree.
One clerk of the course can declare the going soft while another would call the same ground good to soft or even good (soft in places). It's too variable really.
MarcusMel
28th April 2005, 11:12
There might be a way of doing it by measureing ground resistance between two points with different power level samples. Like what they sometimes do in the geophysics of archeology. Sparky?
Onlyforfun
28th April 2005, 11:41
There might be a way of doing it by measureing ground resistance between two points with different power level samples. Like what they sometimes do in the geophysics of archeology. Sparky?
Or you could just drop a heavy rod from a set height into the ground. Low-tech rules OK! :laugh
MarcusMel
28th April 2005, 11:50
We will both get taken to court for crulity to worms!! :doh
Onlyforfun
28th April 2005, 13:11
Not again! :yikes:
sparkyminer
28th April 2005, 13:16
Or you could just drop a heavy rod from a set height into the ground. Low-tech rules OK! :laugh
I'm with OFF, water content is not the only factor in determining resistance. MM
vegyjones
28th April 2005, 13:18
You could end up with a different going every 5 metres! :doh
GlosRFC
28th April 2005, 22:00
I thought this thread refered to London Oirish leaving the Majedski stadium.
samantha1303
28th April 2005, 22:02
I thought it was soft, Susan should be able to clarify or one of our Irish friends -
eastyorkshireracing
28th April 2005, 22:19
To be sure it would be going that is heavier than good, but soft enough not to call it good to soft if the definition of heavy is softer than good to soft on softer going than soft, be jabers :laugh
Clear as mud it is!
Gordon
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